Monday 25 August 2008

Climate Change Could Be Impetus For Wars, Other Conflicts, Expert Says

�Hurricane season has arrived, sparking renewed debate regarding possible links between globose warming and the absolute frequency and austereness of hurricanes, heat waves and other extreme weather events.



Meanwhile, a related give-and-take has ensued among international-security experts world Health Organization believe climate-change-related damage to global ecosystems and the resulting competitor for natural resources crataegus laevigata increasingly answer as triggers for wars and other conflicts in the future.



J�rgen Scheffran, a research scientist in the Program in Arms Control, Disarmament and International Security and the Center for Advanced BioEnergy Research at the University of Illinois, is among those elevation concerns. In a survey of late research published earlier this summer in the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, Scheffran concluded that "the impact of climate change on human and world-wide security could extend far beyond the limited scope the world has seen thus far."



Scheffran's review included a critical analysis of four trends identified in a account by the German Advisory Council on Global Change as among those most possibly destabilizing populations and governments: debasement of freshwater resources, food insecurity, rude disasters and environmental migration.



He also cited last year's report by a working group of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change indicating that climate alteration would affect species and ecosystems worldwide, from rainforests to coral reefs.



In his analysis, Scheffran noted that the figure of domain regions vulnerable to drouth was expected to rise.



Water supplies stored in glaciers and snow cover in major mint ranges such as the Andes and Himalayas too are expected to decrease, he said.



"Most critical for human survival are water and food, which ar sensitive to changing climatical conditions," Scheffran said.



The degradation of these critical resources, combined with threats to populations caused by natural disasters, disease and crumbling economic and ecosystems, he said, could ultimately hold "cascading effects."



"Environmental changes caused by orbicular warming will not only if affect human living conditions but english hawthorn also bring forth larger societal effects, by threatening the infrastructures of society or by inducement social responses that exacerbate the problem," he wrote. "The associated socio-economic and political accent can cave the performance of communities, the effectuality of institutions, and the stability of societal structures. These degraded conditions could contribute to civil strife, and, worse, armed conflict."



In fact, Scheffran said, there's evidence that such dramas are already playing out on the world stage - whether already unnatural by climate change or not.



"Large areas of Africa are suffering from scarceness of intellectual nourishment and fresh water resources, making them more vulnerable to conflict. An example is Sudan's Darfur responsibility where an ongoing conflict was aggravated since droughts forced Arab herders to move into areas of African farmers."



Other regions of the world - including the Middle East, Central Asia and South America - likewise are organism affected, he said.



With so much at stake, Scheffran recommends multiple strategies for forestalling other than insurmountable consequences. Among the most critical, he said, is for governments to incorporate measures for addressing climate change within national policy. Beyond that, he advocates a cooperative, international approach to addressing concerns.



"Although climate change bears a significant conflict potential, it can besides transform the international system toward more cooperation if it is seen as a common threat that requires joint action," he said.



One of the more than hopeful, recent signs on that front, he aforementioned, was the 2007 Bali climate crown that brought together more than 10,000 representatives from passim the earth to draft a clime plan.



"The Bali Roadmap has many good ideas, merely was criticized as being too vague to induce a major policy shift," Scheffran aforesaid. "Nevertheless, the seeming conflict between environment and the economy will be charles Herbert Best overcome with the identification that protecting the mood in the best stake of the economy."



In plus to global cooperation, Scheffran believes that those occupying Earth now can check a destiny about the future by studying the past.



"History has shown how dependent our culture is on a narrow window of climatical conditions for average temperature and precipitation," he said. "The cracking human civilizations began to flourish after the last ice old age, and some disappeared due to droughts and other adverse shifts in the climate. The so-called 'Little Ice Age' in the northern hemisphere a few hundred years ago was caused by an ordinary drop in temperature of less than a degree Celsius.



"The consequences were quite severe in parts of Europe, associated with deprivation of harvest and population decline," Scheffran said. "Riots and military conflicts became more likely, as a recent empirical study has suggested."



However, as history has demonstrated, human race are quite capable of adapting to changing climate conditions as long as those changes are moderate.



"The challenge is to tiresome down the dynamics and stabilize the climate scheme at levels which ar not grievous," Scheffran said.



He remains affirmative that this is still possible - in large part, because public awareness and educational efforts taking place today are making concerns about climate change a priority.



"Global warming receives now more public and political attention than a few years ago," Scheffran said.



"Grass-roots movements are emergent in the United States for protecting the climate and developing energy alternatives, involving non only many local communities and companies but besides influential states such as California, light-emitting diode by Gov. (Arnold) Schwarzenegger."



Further evidence that the issue is beingness taken earnestly at last-place, Scheffran said, is advent from the campaign trail.



"Congressional and presidential candidates now acknowledge that something has to be done to play a leading function on zip and climate change to not fall behind the rest of the earth," he said.





Source: Melissa Mitchell

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign



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Friday 15 August 2008

Download Nina Hagen






Nina Hagen
   

Artist: Nina Hagen: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

Easy Listening
New Age
Punk
Alternative
Rock
Rock: Punk-Rock
Rock: Pop-Rock

   







Discography:


Om Namah Shivaya
   

 Om Namah Shivaya

   Year: 2002   

Tracks: 13
Om Namah Shivay
   

 Om Namah Shivay

   Year: 2002   

Tracks: 12
Return Of The Mother
   

 Return Of The Mother

   Year: 2000   

Tracks: 10
Bee Happy
   

 Bee Happy

   Year: 1996   

Tracks: 14
Freud Euch
   

 Freud Euch

   Year: 1995   

Tracks: 15
Revolution Ballroom
   

 Revolution Ballroom

   Year: 1993   

Tracks: 11
Street
   

 Street

   Year: 1991   

Tracks: 12
Love
   

 Love

   Year: 1987   

Tracks: 10
In Ekstasy (English)
   

 In Ekstasy (English)

   Year: 1985   

Tracks: 11
Fearless (Brazilian Edition)
   

 Fearless (Brazilian Edition)

   Year: 1984   

Tracks: 16
Nunsexmonkrock
   

 Nunsexmonkrock

   Year: 1982   

Tracks: 14
Unbehagen
   

 Unbehagen

   Year: 1980   

Tracks: 9
Unbehagen
   

 Unbehagen

   Year: 1980   

Tracks: 9
Nina Hagen Band
   

 Nina Hagen Band

   Year: 1979   

Tracks: 11






Born in East Germany, Nina Hagen had already gained a repute as a aureate rock vocalist by the time she emigrated to the West in 1976, where she formed a isthmus, sign to CBS Germany, and released their debut record album, Nina Hagen Band, in 1978. It was followed in 1980 by Unbehagen. Hagen's issue one U.S. release, Nina Hagen Band EP (1980), was a four-song EP consisting of songs drawn from her deuce German releases. She affected to New York and made her first base base English-language LP, Nunsexmonkrock, in 1982. That and its followup, the Giorgio Moroder-produced Fearless (1983), charted in shortly, and "New York New York" was a Top Ten dance order






Thursday 7 August 2008

Band Of Horses

Band Of Horses   
Artist: Band Of Horses

   Genre(s): 
Indie
   



Discography:


Cease to Begin   
 Cease to Begin

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 10


Everything All The Time   
 Everything All The Time

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 10




Emerging in 2004 with a woodsy blend of midtempo stone and reverb-laden vocals, Band of Horses rapidly gained an consultation in their native Northwest before Everything All the Time made them indie rock darlings. Multi-instrumentalists Ben Bridwell and Mat Brooke founded the grouping after an eight-year run with Carissa's Wierd, and an early operation alongside future labelmates Iron & Wine caught the attending of Sub Pop Records. The Seattle-based label gestural the grouping in 2005 and reissued their self-released EP by and by that year, spell Band of Horses retreated to the studio to record their full-length debut. Everything All the Time emerged in March 2006 and was warmly received; however, Brooke did non tour in support of the record album and had formally left hand the chemical group by July, choosing rather to consecrate his time to some early Sub Pop behave, Grand Archives. Nevertheless, Bridwell solidiered on with now-permanent bandmates Rob Hampton (bass voice) and Creighton Barrett (drums), playing stateside shows and touring Europe in documentation of the band's debut. The radical returned to the States and resettled to Mt. Pleasant, SC, to be closer to their families; presently later, Band of Horses entered the studio apartment apartment with manufacturer Phil Ek (cosmos Health Organization also helmed Everything All the Time) to record their soph record album. Stop to Begin was released in October 2007, and the band set off on some other stateside go that same calendar month.